Trump plays coy on his congressional subpoena

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Oct 14, 2022 View in browser
 
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By Eli Okun

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Donald Trump speaks into a microphone at the Minden Tahoe Airport.

Donald Trump blasted the select committee's investigation and repeated debunked conspiracy theories about election fraud. | José Luis Villegas/AP Photo

BREAKING — "Judge bucks Trump, orders Pence aide to testify to Jan. 6 grand jury," by WaPo's Spencer Hsu, Josh Dawsey and Jackie Alemany: "In a sealed decision that could clear the way for other top Trump White House officials to answer questions before a grand jury, Chief U.S. District Judge BERYL A. HOWELL ruled that former Pence chief of staff MARC SHORT probably possessed information important to the Justice Department's criminal investigation."

WILL HE OR WON'T HE? — After the House Jan. 6 committee's surprise vote to subpoena DONALD TRUMP at its hearing Thursday, the former president responded with an enraged 14-page letter made public this morning — but he didn't indicate whether he'll comply.

Trump blasted the select committee's investigation, repeated debunked conspiracy theories about election fraud, blamed Democratic leaders for Jan. 6 and included photos of the crowd of his supporters on that day. "THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 2020 WAS RIGGED AND STOLEN!" the first line reads, falsely.

While Trump didn't directly weigh in on the subpoena, this morning he posted a Fox News story on his Truth Social account with this headline: "Trump 'loves the idea of testifying' before Jan. 6 committee: source close to the former president."

But our colleagues Kelly Hooper and Kyle Cheney have a reality check on that possibility : "[T]he former president appears unlikely to take the legal risk of testifying at a time when multiple criminal inquiries are pursuing evidence of Trump's and his allies' efforts to subvert the 2020 election." Trump's full letter

What we didn't see Thursday: The Daily Beast's Zachary Petrizzo has new details on some of the video footage of ROGER STONE the committee opted not to play at the hearing. When he learned on Jan. 20, 2021, that Trump wouldn't pardon him, Stone was captured exploding by documentarians: "JARED KUSHNER has an IQ of 70. He's coming to Miami. We will eject him from Miami very quickly; he will be leaving very quickly," Stone said. "He has 100 security guards. I will have 5,000 security guards." And this, regarding IVANKA TRUMP: "Fuck you and your abortionist bitch daughter."

More from the committee: NBC's Julia Ainsley reports that the panel asked the Secret Service for records of communications between an agent and the Oath Keepers. "The communications stop before a Dec. 12 rally. But unclear if another agent may have talked to them prior to Jan. 6."

Who wasn't watching: At the Oath Keepers seditious conspiracy trial today, the 16 jurors were polled on whether they watched Thursday's hearing, per Kyle Cheney . None of them did.

Another Jan. 6 read: "FBI official was warned after Jan. 6 that some in the bureau were 'sympathetic' to the Capitol rioters," by NBC's Ryan Reilly and Ken Dilanian: "'There's no good way to say it, so I'll just be direct: from my first-hand and second-hand information from conversations since January 6th there is, at best, a sizable percentage of the employee population that felt sympathetic to the group that stormed the Capitol,' and that it was no different than the Black Lives Matter protests of summer 2020, the person wrote in an email to PAUL ABBATE, who is now the No. 2 official at the bureau." The email

ELITE STRIKE FORCE TEAM — SIDNEY POWELL's nonprofit Defending the Republic raised $16.4 million in the year after the 2020 election, as she propagated conspiracy theories about voter fraud, WaPo's Jon Swaine and Emma Brown report . It spent roughly $8 million in that period. The detailed tax filings

Happy Friday afternoon. Reminder: The highly anticipated Georgia Senate debate kicks off from Savannah at 7 p.m. Bookmark this link

 

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THE BIG PICTURE

THE NEW ELECTORATE — A big new WaPo/Ipsos survey finds Hispanic voters supporting Democrats for Congress over Republicans by a 63% to 36% margin, Scott Clement, Emily Guskin, Amy Wang and Sabrina Rodríguez write . That's pretty similar to JOE BIDEN's 2020 margin with Latinos. It's in line with other recent data points indicating that while the GOP hasn't built on the gains it made with Hispanics two years ago, Democrats have failed to recoup their losses. In 2018 and 2016, Dems were up by about 40 points with the demographic bloc. The Post poll finds that rising prices are the No. 1 issue (31%), followed by abortion (20%).

The Atlantic's @RonBrownstein : "With the highest inflation in 40 years Ds would take 63% of Hispanic voters, if they can actually manage that, in a heartbeat."

BATTLE FOR THE SENATE

SHOW ME THE MONEY — Ohio Democrats are pleading with the national party to invest more resources in Rep. TIM RYAN's bid stat, warning that D.C. risks losing a winnable seat, AP's Steve Peoples and Julie Carr Smyth report . Ryan seems resigned to the lack of support, but local Democrats feel abandoned, and they say the party could rue a preventable narrow loss if it doesn't double down. The Senate Majority PAC hasn't ruled out further investments. "But there are no easy options for Democratic groups deciding where to dedicate their final round of resources," AP writes.

THE WAGES OF SCANDAL — The recent reporting that Georgia Republican HERSCHEL WALKER paid for an ex-girlfriend's abortion (which Walker denies) seems to have made a small but meaningful impact on the polls: He's dropped by about 2.5 points on average, NYT's Nate Cohn writes , which may be enough to swing the election and ultimately control of the Senate.

— The Daily Beast's Roger Sollenberger has new reporting on Walker's family history: He got Walker's child support agreement for his youngest son, which shows that he pays $3,500 a month (about 1% of his income) and has no visitation rights: "[W]e shared the details with five experienced New York family lawyers. Their verdict was unanimous: The mother got a raw deal."

WAKING UP IN VEGAS — Another story to file under "Democrats in trouble in Nevada": Vox's Christian Paz reports from Las Vegas that a loss by Sen. CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO would flash warning signs for Democrats nationwide with working-class and Latino voters. Seen as a moderate workhorse, Cortez Masto is pitching the state on her under-the-radar record — and trying to use her Hispanic identity both to connect with voters and to break with her party's brand. Paz finds abortion and the cost of living top of mind for many Henderson voters — and a general lack of enthusiasm about voting, which could mean turnout disaster for Dems.

KEYS TO THE KEYSTONE — Pennsylvania Democrat JOHN FETTERMAN is going up with a new TV ad tackling questions about his health head on, "in which he ties his thoughts about his family after his stroke to the daily struggles of Pennsylvanians," per PennLive's J.D. Prose . The 30-second spot

— Republican MEHMET OZ made a few moves to the center on drugs and crime in an interview with NBC's Dasha Burns : He backed Biden's recent marijuana pardon announcement and said he opposes federal mandatory minimums. Burns also pressed Oz on whether the buck stops with him after his campaign mocked Fetterman's health. "I accepted responsibility and I deal with issues as they come up," Oz said. "But he has his own set of issues. And I think we need to look, again, eye to eye and say, 'Here's what we're going to do going forward.' We should have had a debate already."

— Oz is focused on winning moderate crossover voters who won't support DOUG MASTRIANO, The Hill's Al Weaver reports from Philadelphia. "I'll work with whoever I have to," Oz told him. "I don't stand for the extremes on these positions so I look right up the middle and see what would actually work to deal with the crises."

BATTLE FOR THE HOUSE

THE RED WAVE — The high number of open Democratic-held seats is one of the party's biggest vulnerabilities in November, writes The Cook Political Report's Dave Wasserman . Dems have three times as many difficult races without an incumbent as do Republicans, baking in a crucial structural benefit for the GOP. He also shifted two ratings, moving New York's 4th District from likely to leaning Democratic and Tennessee's 5th from solid to likely Republican.

NEVER TWEET — New Mexico Democrat GABE VASQUEZ has been running to the center in his bid to take down Rep. YVETTE HERRELL, but CNN's Andrew Kaczynski and Em Steck dig up old tweets that he's deleted that advocated more liberal positions. Vasquez deleted tweets (fairly standard for progressives) that said the fossil fuel industry was "extremely toxic," "irresponsible" and "moribund"; that used the hashtag "#AmeriKKKa"; and that promoted the Green New Deal and Medicare for All.

BATTLE FOR THE STATES

THE REBRAND ATTEMPT — Former Kansas Secretary of State KRIS KOBACH became a national lightning rod for his outspoken conservative stances on immigration and voter ID. Then he lost two statewide races. Now, as the GOP nominee for AG, Kobach is staying on message with a lower-key approach, AP's John Hanna reports from Topeka. Both parties see the race as a toss-up.

DOWN BALLOT — Voters look poised to pass a ballot referendum in South Dakota expanding Medicaid this fall. That would make it the seventh red state to do so, a lingering legacy of Obamacare — but don't expect more to join their ranks anytime soon, Megan Messerly reports . Among the holdouts, only Florida, Mississippi and Wyoming even have the option for such a referendum, and there don't appear to be near-term plans in the works.

HOT POLLS

— Illinois: Statewide Democrats are in good shape in the latest Chicago Sun-Times/WBEZ poll : Gov. J.B. PRITZKER leads DARREN BAILEY 49% to 34% (winning even downstate), and Sen. TAMMY DUCKWORTH is beating KATHY SALVI 50% to 36%.

HOT ADS
Via Steve Shepard

— Pennsylvania: A down-ballot boogeyman? The DCCC's latest ad backing Rep. SUSAN WILD in the Lehigh Valley seeks to tie GOP challenger LISA SCHELLER to Mastriano, who is trailing in the polls.

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING: What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president's ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

 
 

THE WHITE HOUSE

PRICE POINT — Biden today is signing an executive order directing HHS to make plans that will lower prescription drug prices, per Reuters' Trevor Hunnicutt . The department will have three months to detail its proposals for "new models of care and payment," which Biden is linking to his administration's broader efforts to fight inflation.

MORE POLITICS

STORY OF OUR TIMES — One conspiracy theory gaining purchase on the fringes of the right lately is the idea that schools are stocking litter boxes for students who identify as cats, which has been repeated by everyone from Rep. LAUREN BOEBERT (R-Colo.) to JOE ROGAN to Minnesota gubernatorial nominee SCOTT JENSEN. NBC's Tyler Kingkade, Ben Goggin, Ben Collins and Brandy Zadrozny dug into the origins of this myth — and uncovered that while it has no basis in truth, there is one sad source for the confusion: The Colorado school district that includes Columbine High does stock classrooms with some cat litter — "as part of 'go buckets' that contain emergency supplies in case students are locked in a classroom during a shooting."

THE ECONOMY

BY THE NUMBERS — U.S. retail sales numbers were unchanged in September following a 0.4% increase in August, an indicator of some cooling in the economy amid high prices and interest rates, per WSJ's Austen Hufford . Economists had expected retail sales to keep rising. The Commerce Department numbers are not adjusted for inflation, but they reflect consumers cutting back on some discretionary purchases.

INFLATION NATION — High prices have spread so thoroughly through the economy that they'll be much more difficult for policymakers to dislodge, AP's Christopher Rugaber reports . Even as some of the early drivers of this wave of inflation, like gas prices, fall, rising prices in arenas like health care and housing are propping up overall numbers. The service sector and consumer spending have shown stubborn persistence, complicating the Fed's task.

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

DANCE OF THE SUPERPOWERS — "Xi Jinping's Endgame: A China Prepared for Conflict With the U.S.," by WSJ's Jonathan Cheng: "Mr. Xi has made clear that his overarching goal is to restore China to what he believes is its rightful place as a global player and a peer of the U.S. As a consequence, he has come to see the possibility of a showdown with the West as increasingly likely, according to people familiar with his thinking."

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE — "It's unlikely that we will support any additional arms sales to the Saudis," warned Sen. CHRIS COONS (D-Del.), a member of the Foreign Relations Committee and a top Biden ally, on CNN this morning. It was the latest evidence that Saudi Arabia's move to slash oil production with OPEC+ could transform its standing in Washington. "This was a punch in the gut," Coons said.

Both countries are stewing, misunderstanding each other and causing potentially irreparable damage to their relationship, Bloomberg's Courtney McBride and Annmarie Hordern report . "The remarkably public contretemps reflects brewing impatience within the White House now that it has little to show for Biden's outreach to the Saudis … That frustration is shared by the Saudis. One Gulf official said there's a real sense of grievance that the US didn't help Saudi Arabia during periods of low oil prices but is asking for its help now."

 

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BEYOND THE BELTWAY

ILLUMINATING READ — "Cops say a Trump supporter attacked Biden fans in Miami. Does an impartial jury exist?" by the Miami Herald's Bianca Padró Ocasio: "[E]fforts to find an impartial jury to decide [EDUARDO] ACOSTA's fate have provided a window into how politically divided Miami remains … As Acosta's attorneys and prosecutors vetted potential jurors Tuesday, one man answered questions about why he listened to the podcast hosted by Joe Rogan … A woman was asked to explain why she liked a tweet by Trump's cousin, MARY TRUMP, calling the former president 'a traitor' almost two years ago. Another confessed outright that political conversations gave her anxiety and she wouldn't be able to sit through the trial."

WAR IN UKRAINE

THE LATEST TRANCHE — The next package of U.S. security aid to Ukraine, totaling $725 million, likely will "include munitions and vehicles but not significant new capabilities or counter-air defenses," Reuters' Mike Stone and Humeyra Pamuk report . It could be announced as soon as today.

PLAYBOOKERS

OUT AND ABOUT — Marcy Carsey co-hosted an event at her home Wednesday night with Donna Langley and Gerry Laybourne to introduce the LA creative community to D.C.-based nonprofit Vital Voices Global Partnership, the night before President Joe Biden headlined a fundraiser at Carsey's home. SPOTTED: Jim Burtson, Vanessa Pappas, Alexandra Figueroa, Cheryl Hines, Beth Hubbard, Holly Goline, Shawna Jackson, Emmy Laybourne, Jarl Mohn, Alyse Nelson, Liam Dall and Linda Roth.

— SPOTTED at NJI Media's 15th anniversary party at the Kreeger Museum: Daniel Eubanks, Paul Lindsay, Mbessin Sonko, Hope Randall, Brian Wohlert, Tom Michael, Priscilla VanderVeer, Jonny and Margaret Hiler, Ed Mullen, Nate Politi, Sarah McDonald, Kelley Gannon, Adam Sotomayor, Nathan Imperiale, Sarah Fritz, Josh Shultz, Lara Kline, Megan and Rob Cumming, Amos Snead, Michael Kaplan, Scott Sadlon, Gary Barton, Scott Wilkerson, Geoff Hill, Garrett Carlough and Megan Van Etten. 

MEDIA MOVES — Konstantin Kakaes is now senior editor at Quanta Magazine. He most recently was deputy tech and cybersecurity editor at POLITICO, and is an MIT Technology Review and Economist alum. … Aya Batrawy will be a Middle East correspondent for NPR. She most recently has been global economy and mobility reporter at the AP, per Talking Biz News .

TRANSITIONS — Karen Bailey-Chapman is now SVP for public and government affairs in the Specialty Equipment Market Association's D.C. office. She most recently was SVP of external affairs for the American Beverage Association . … Hannah Barr is now scheduler for Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.). She most recently was scheduler for Rep. French Hill (R-Ark.).

 

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California Today: Fall arrives in the Golden State

The crisp breeze, festivals and autumnal family traditions.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Friday. You told us what you love about autumn. Plus, Stanford University apologizes for limiting Jewish admissions in the 1950s.

Traditional dancers performed during the Day of the Dead celebration at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles in 2019.Etienne Laurent/EPA, via Shutterstock

Fall has arrived in California.

The extreme heat of late summer has thankfully passed, and the days are quickly becoming shorter and chillier. The trees near you may not be turning that classic autumnal orange, but we've entered a new season in the Golden State nevertheless.

For the past few weeks, you've been writing to me about what you love about fall in California, like the crisp breeze, local festivals and your family's special traditions. Here's some of what you shared, lightly edited:

"Without fail, the softening of the late afternoon light in coastal California reminds me how extraordinary it is to live here. The hills turn golden, and then peach, and then pink, and then quickly into shadow. Even as a native Californian, I never tire of the shifting of the sunlight and am grateful to notice it each fall." — Kate Kehl, San Francisco

"New Englanders have vibrant autumn leaves but in California, fall is festival season. And, as the most religiously diverse state in the U.S. mainland, lots of those are religious festivals. Here in Silicon Valley, we are feted by Buddhists, Jains and Hindus during Diwali celebrations in mid-October and by the Latinx community in late October and early November for Día de los Muertos. We're also in the thick of the grape harvest and it's pumpkin season, too. So also we're treated to wine, pumpkin and harvest festivals up and down the coast." — Elizabeth Drescher, San Jose

Nita Scott

"Every year in late September and early October, my white Chinese anemone bloom. The four-inch-tall stalks are a sign that fall has arrived in my garden." — Nita Scott, Long Beach

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"People in other states say we don't have fall color in California, but we do. It comes predominantly in the form of the poison oak shrubs that grow along the hiking trails and throughout the hills and woods, twining themselves around the tree branches and climbing up to the canopies. I truly love it. The fall colors of the poison oak aren't just one warm shade. They are peaches, corals, rose-petal pinks, Cabernet tones and lipstick reds. The leaves are so delicate that when the sun shines through them, they glow like stained-glass windows or bright lollipops. Poison oak has a bad reputation because of the itchy rash its oils cause, but if you look at it and don't touch it, it's magical." — Laura Austin Wiley, Castro Valley

"Every year, usually the third week in October, my family and I head up to Julian, a little gold-mining town about a 50-minute drive from San Diego. In October, the town hosts 'Apple Days,' where you can pick apples and find your favorite pumpkins.

When I was pregnant with our first son in 1988, we decided to go to Julian for our 'last weekend as a couple.' We took photos of my big pregnant self, standing in a pumpkin patch. The next year, in 1989, I was pregnant again, this time with my daughter. We took photos of my big pregnant self and my almost 1-year-old son.

For the next 34 years, we've returned to Julian on the third weekend in October. Our son-in-law proposed to our daughter there because he knew it was her favorite place to visit.

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We had to get a bigger place last year to accommodate our growing family. And this year, my daughter-in-law will be carrying our next grandson when we visit in a few weeks. And yes, we will take a photo of her and her pregnant self in the pumpkin patch." — Anne Riley, San Diego

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Charging stations for electric vehicles in Victorville.Philip Cheung for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • E.V. inequality: As California undergoes a transition to electric vehicles, low-income residents who need them most are in danger of being left behind, The Guardian reports.
  • A grandfather's final gift: Death is a reality many tend to avoid, but the writer Sara Harrison found that there was another way to address the inevitable.
  • Digital license plates: California is now one of three states to allow drivers to replace their metal license plates with mounted digital ones, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • Stanford: Stanford University apologized for its efforts to suppress Jewish student admissions in the 1950s and for denying that it had done so in the years that followed. The university also issued a report that found that some administrators had "regularly misled" people who raised concerns about anti-Jewish bias.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Los Angeles City Council: The City Council will not hold its regularly scheduled meeting on Friday amid calls for the resignation of two members, The Los Angeles Times reports.
  • ID theft: The founder and chief executive of a software company targeted by election deniers was arrested on suspicion of stealing data on hundreds of Los Angeles County poll workers, The Associated Press reports.
  • Informants: The U.S. Justice Department said that the Sheriff's Department and prosecutors in Orange County ran an extensive jailhouse informant program for years that violated the rights of criminal defendants, The Associated Press reports.
  • Football: The performance of both the U.S.C. and U.C.L.A. football teams has led to a college football resurgence in Los Angeles, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • Kidnapping: The California man accused of kidnapping and killing an 8-month-old baby, her parents and uncle this month pleaded not guilty, The Associated Press reports.
  • Potential lawsuits: Fresno Unified's school board denied claims for damages filed by lawyers from two different Wolters Elementary students, The Fresno Bee reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Ghost boat: A 36-foot boat carried U.S. troops during the invasion of Sicily and the Battle of Tarawa in the Pacific. How it ended up in Lake Shasta is a mystery.
  • Water for elk: The Point Reyes National Seashore has become so dry that water is being trucked to the area to satiate its elk population, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Sexual misconduct allegations: A coach at El Cajon Valley High School is under investigation for allegations of sexual misconduct involving a student, The San Diego Union-Tribune reports.
  • Nursing home: The deadline to close a nursing home administered by San Francisco has been extended again after city and federal regulators reached an agreement that allows the home to remain open, The Associated Press reports.
Johnny Miller for The New York Times.

What we're eating

Coastal rocks of the Big Dome at the Cypress Cove trail in Point Lobos State Natural Reserve.Andre Seale / VWPics via AP Images

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Marty Conoley, who lives in Santa Barbara:

"A few miles south of Carmel on Highway 1, Point Lobos State Natural Reserve awaits a limited number of visitors each day. Where the 17-Mile Drive beckons bikers and cars, Point Lobos is a walker's paradise. The Monterey cypress trees have gnarled trunks and branches contorted by the sea breeze and the salt spray of the Pacific Ocean. Pelicans soar near rocky cliff faces. California sea lions bark from offshore islands. Southern sea otters lounge on their kelp beds. Bring your binoculars, make a picnic lunch and come early. Enjoy this natural scenic wonder."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

What we're recommending

Last fall, Rachel McKibbens's father and brother died of Covid just two weeks apart. Here's the story of their family — and what the pandemic revealed and what it destroyed.

From The New York Times and Serial comes "We Were Three." Listen to all three episodes here.

Tell us

What are your favorite places to visit in California?

Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. Please include your name and the city in which you live. We'll be sharing more travel tips in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes in "Clerks III" (2022).Lionsgate

And before you go, some good news

Over the past three decades, the director Kevin Smith and the actor Jason Mewes have parlayed their friendship into one of Hollywood's most unlikely acting partnerships, both onscreen and off. The two played Jay and Silent Bob in the 1994 indie cult debut feature "Clerks," which was Smith's directorial debut.

"I feel like I'm only comfortable with certain people," Mewes told The Times. "People annoy me. But I enjoy his company. I feel comfortable around him."

"I'm standing next to somebody who knows me better than almost anybody else in this world," Smith said. "He's my best friend, and he likes me for me, long before I was like, 'Hey, we should make a movie or something.'"

"Yeah," Mewes added. "What he said."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back on Monday. — Soumya

Correction: Yesterday's newsletter misidentified the person who designed Golden Gate Park. It was William Hammond Hall, not Frederick Law Olmsted.

Briana Scalia and Miles McKinley contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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